- Google introduced Gemini Omni Flash
- It aims to make video creation easier by letting users refine projects naturally instead of using editing software
- It emphasizes transparency and security through AI watermarking and identity protection
Google’s next big AI move is aimed squarely at creativity. The company has introduced Gemini Omni at Google I/O 2026 as part of its massive lineup of new Gemini features.
Omni is supposed to combine Gemini’s reasoning capabilities with media creation tools that can generate and edit content across different formats.
The first release, Gemini Omni Flash, focuses on video and arrives with an unusually ambitious goal. Google wants people to create content from almost any kind of input, whether it starts with text, images, audio, or existing video.
Gemini Omni Flash will launch through the Gemini app, Google Flow, YouTube Shorts and YouTube Create, with a broader expansion planned later for developers and enterprise customers.
Look at
The ad builds on the work Google has already done with AI-generated images. By 2025, the Nano Banana expanded Gemini’s imaging capabilities and became a surprisingly handy tool for everything from restoring aged photographs to turning rough sketches into polished concepts.
The Gemini Omni is Google’s attempt to push that idea much further. The company described Gemini Omni as a way to replace traditional editing software with a conversation that can continuously refine a video.
Conversation editing
One of Gemini Omni’s biggest ideas is to remove complexity from editing. Google says users can change videos through natural language while maintaining the consistency of the changes.
Characters remain recognizable. Scenes maintain continuity. Movement remains continuous instead of being reset every time a prompt changes. The system is also designed to better understand how objects behave in the physical world, incorporating improved handling of motion, gravity and motion dynamics.
This is how the mirror above ripples like liquid when someone touches it, or how a sculpture can be made of bubbles. Google is trying to position Gemini Omni as something bigger than a video generator.
That puts Google right into a rapidly escalating competition around AI media tools. But it’s a race to see who can make AI video tools feel so intuitive that regular people will actually use them, as much as anything else. Google’s answer seems to be taking the conversational route.
Finally, Google said Gemini Omni will go beyond video. Future versions are expected to support combinations of photos, prompts, music and reference recordings in a single project.
Trust in AI creations
Powerful creative AI creates a trust challenge, which Google recognized. The company is keen to highlight how videos created with Gemini Omni include SynthID watermarking technology meant to identify AI-generated media. The company also says verification tools will work across Gemini, Chrome and Search as part of a broader transparency effort.
Users will initially be able to create video avatars based on themselves, including their own voice. But more advanced features involving speech modification are still under evaluation while Google works on security concerns.
This cautious approach reflects the increasingly awkward balancing act that all major AI companies face. Building more capable systems does not mean that trust in them will be built together.
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